http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/opinion/editorials/stories/081605dnedicollin.ccc504a.html"The Price of Prosperity," a three-part series that wraps up in The Dallas Morning News today, paints the picture of a growing "Can't we have both?" mentality in modern society. Although the statistics and stories focus on Collin County, one of the richest areas in the U.S., the mentality is evident on lesser scales throughout North Texas and, indeed, the nation.
The story is just a little more ironic in Collin County because it is, perhaps,
the reddest county in a very red state. And it's home to a lot of fiscal conservatives who preach family values – while spending more than they have and spoiling their children. Some of the same people who have filed for the record number of bankruptcies in Collin County in recent years surely have criticized political leaders for "not making tough choices." With tax dollars, it seems so clear to them. But with credit cards lining their wallets and an image to keep up, somehow rhetorical "tough choices" seem impossible.
To be sure, not everyone in Collin County, and not everyone with credit card debt, is in too deep.
But to many so-called fiscal conservatives, it seems perfectly OK to cut taxes and increase spending on a war at the same time. And if that's defensible, then it certainly makes sense to buy those new $10,000 granite countertops now, rather saving for them. After all, the Joneses have them now.